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Class Detail:

WN 2013
Afroamerican & African Studies
AAS 432 - Violent Environments: Oil, Development and the Discourse of Power
Section 001

Credits: 3
Other: Theme
Waitlist Capacity: 99
Consent: With permission of instructor.
Advisory Prerequisites: AAS 200 (CAAS 200).
Repeatability: May not be repeated for credit.
Primary Instructor: Adunbi,Omolade

 

(real time availability for all sections)

This course examines violence and its relationship to oil as a non-renewable natural resource. The course will focus on the close examination and comparison of discourses and practices concerned with resource extraction, resource distribution, energy security, and ‘modernity’ in the United States, North America, Africa, Europe, the Middle East and Latin America. Emphasis will be on case studies on oil as a non-renewable natural resource and how its extraction have contributed to reshaping livelihoods, energy security and creating spaces of violence as well as the possibilities for ‘development’. The course investigates how oil explorations in postcolonial states have given rise to projects of ‘nation building’, state-making and challenges of governance that continue to confront and reshape the idea of what constitutes the ‘nation’. We will focus on how abundant oil resources have changed the ‘face’ of the state and its people bringing about discourses of power, culture, energy security, and modernity. We will also focus on how extraction of oil constantly produces violence and challenges to state power over its control. We will investigate how such conflicts, sometimes violent, have and continue to redefine state, multinational corporations and communal production of power in resource extractive enclaves around the world. At the end, we will ask "what if there is no oil"?

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Course Syllabi
Syllabi are available to current LSA students. IMPORTANT: These syllabi are provided to give students a general idea about the courses, as offered by LSA departments and programs in prior academic terms. The syllabi do not necessarily reflect the assignments, sequence of course materials, and/or course expectations that the faculty and departments/programs have for these same courses in the current and/or future terms.

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Textbooks/Other Materials (data maintained by department in Wolverine Access)

ISBN: 0822332728 Crude chronicles : indigenous politics, multinational oil, and neoliberalism in Ecuador, Author: Suzana Sawyer., Publisher: Duke Univ. Press 2. print. 2004
Required

ISBN: 0226023559 The Pan-African nation : oil and the spectacle of culture in Nigeria, Author: Andrew Apter., Publisher: The University of Chicago Press [Online-Au 2005
Required

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